This course is no longer available

Latest User Comments

The presentation did not adequately cover patient client relationship in regards to honey bees hives. For the typical small animal practitioner VCP relationship is one animal/one client - that comes to your clinic (or a home visit). I don't know what constitutes VCP for a cattle herd either. Do I need to visit each apiary within my state that they own, do i need to set foot on their farm, can they bring in test results, pictures, dead bees, etc to the clinic or email them, so i need to meet the client in person (email vs clinic visit charge) (Farm call, no farm call?) Etc.

Dr raymond crain dvm (1 Nov 2016)

This took too much time for the amount of use info presented

I would like to...

Course Availability

This course is only available to trainees days after purchase.
It would need to be repurchased by the trainee if not completed in the allotted time period.
This course is no longer available.
You will need to repurchase if you wish to take the course again.

Description

The webinar will focus on the Veterinary Feed Directive (VFD), what is required and what resources are available for veterinarians.

Objectives

Objectives

Inform veterinarians of the requirements and resources available on the Veterinary Feed Directive

Craig Payne received his DVM degree from the University of Missouri-College of Veterinary Medicine in 1993. Upon graduation he practiced at the Animal Medical Center in Marshfield, MO for one year before moving to Sedalia, MO where he became a partner at the Sedalia Veterinary Center. He practiced in Sedalia until 2005 at which time he moved to Kingsville, TX where he pursued an MS degree in Agribusiness from the King Ranch Institute for Ranch Management at Texas A&M – Kingsville. After completing his MS degree in 2007, Craig accepted a position as an extension veterinarian for the University of Missouri and is currently the Director of the Department of Veterinary Extension and Continuing Education at MU-College of Veterinary Medicine.

Dr. Martin is currently the Staff Veterinarian & Manager of the Animal Health Department for MFA, Inc., a regional agricultural supply cooperative based in Columbia, MO. He received his BS in Agriculture (’75) and DVM (’77) from the University of Missouri-Columbia. After eight years in private practice he entered a graduate program at Michigan State University where he received a Master of Science degree in Food Animal Production in 1991. He has been employed for the last 26 years with MFA, providing animal health and production management information to MFA dealers, employees, and customers.

Current Accreditations

This course has been certified by or provided by the following Certified Organization/s:

Missouri Veterinary Medical Association

0.25 Hours -

Exam Attempts: 3

-

Exam Pass Rate: 50

Faculty and Disclosures

Additional Contributors

Conflicts Declared

Conflicts of Interest declaration by Author:

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User Reviews(2)

The presentation did not adequately cover patient client relationship in regards to honey bees hives. For the typical small animal practitioner VCP relationship is one animal/one client - that comes to your clinic (or a home visit). I don't know what constitutes VCP for a cattle herd either. Do I need to visit each apiary within my state that they own, do i need to set foot on their farm, can they bring in test results, pictures, dead bees, etc to the clinic or email them, so i need to meet the client in person (email vs clinic visit charge) (Farm call, no farm call?) Etc.